Jon Secada - Just Another Day


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Jon Secada - Just Another Day
So what if they're not on the ballot?
Today's Extra Love Songs For Playlist Building Consideration:
Ten Minutes Ago // Julie Andrews & Jon Cypher - Rodgers and Hammerstein's Cinderella (1957) (This wasn't a Disney production, but the same song from the 1997 version did make it to the bracket! (after a double prelim win))
Married Life // Michael Giacchio - Up (2009) (No one submitted it)
If I Never Knew You // Jon Secada & Shanice - Pocahontas (1995) (No one submitted it)
Don't Forget to Vote in our Love Song Mini Tournament!
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destiel vs Jon Secada
destiel
Jon Secada
Madonna, Sylvester Stallone, Gloria Estefan, Jon Secada, Emilio Estefan, Ingrid Casares, Nayib Estefan, Demi Moore, Bruce Willis and Shaq at a party in Miami, 1994.
Hannibal singing “Just Another Day” by Jon Secada underneath Will’s window of the BSHCI. He’s drunk & crying.
Jack pulls up & cajoles him into the car.
“It’s all my fault, Jack!” Hannibal sobs against the window, snot smearing the glass. Jack assured him he can’t blame himself!
Year-End Poll #43: 1992
[Image description: a collage of photos of the 10 musicians and musical groups featured in this poll. In order from left to right, top to bottom: Boyz II Men, Sir Mix-a-Lot, Kriss Kross, Vanessa Williams, TLC, Eric Clapton, En Vogue, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Color Me Badd, Jon Secada. End description]
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Choose your favorite song from 1992
1. End of the Road by Boyz II Men
2. Baby Got Back by Sir Mix-a-Lot
3. Jump by Kriss Kross
4. Save the Best for Last by Vanessa Williams
5. Baby-Baby-Baby by TLC
6. Tears in Heaven by Eric Clapton
7. My Lovin' (You're Never Gonna Get It) by En Vogue
8. Under the Bridge by Red Hot Chili Peppers
9. All 4 Love by Color Me Badd
10. Just Another Day by Jon Secada
Now in 1992, we're seeing the true force of Seattle's music scene making its way to the charts. By that of course I'm talking about the Hot 100 debut of The Emerald City's own Sir-Mix-a-Lot. I'm not even being cheeky (ha.) about that. Not only has Sir-Mix-a-Lot been successful in the rap scene prior to this year (including a platinum record), but with Baby Got Back we're finally seeing rap music officially represented in these polls (along with Kriss Kross). Yesterday, I talked about Miami bass and the obscenity trial surrounding 2 Live Crew. Baby Got Back may not have reached that level of litigation, but the track was incredibly controversial, with the music video being banned by MTV.
This year is also notable for featuring the R&B group, Boyz II Men, and this won't be the last we see of them. End of the Road beat the record at the time for holding the number one spot on the Billboard Hot 100. This record was later broken by Boyz II Men again with the releases of I'll Make Love to You and One Sweet Day (two tracks we may discuss in the future...). The group dominated the charts, with a cumulative 50 weeks at the number one spot. As we get to the latter half of the decade and the boy bands start flooding in, it's clear to see where the direct line of influence was drawn.
But anyone who knows even the most basic facts about music history from this time may notice that something seems to be missing. It's interesting coming at this from a 2023 perspective, because the absence of Nirvana's Smells Like Teen Spirit just feels wrong. It's hard to find a music retrospective that doesn't mention it. As the song that helped grunge find a mainstream audience, rock's shifting image, the changing attitudes and priorities of a new generation of young listeners, the commercialization of the PNW working class lifestyle, the final nail in glam metal's coffin. But on the Billboard Year-End chart, Smells Like Teen Spirit only reached number 32 (which is still an accomplishment for the pop charts). Will we ever see grunge truly featured on these polls? Probably not. At least not until we get to the genre's descendants in the 2000's.